Colombian hostage rescue heads to big screen

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Colombian movie director
Simon Brand is teaming up with producers in Hollywood and his
native country to bring to the big screen the story of last
week's dramatic rescue of Ingrid Betancourt and 14 other
hostages in Colombia.

Brand, whose credits include the 2006 crime thriller
"Unknown" and Colombia's highest-grossing movie, romantic drama
"Paradise Travel," is one of many filmmakers inside Hollywood
and elsewhere vying for rights to the rescue mission.

He is working with Los Angeles-based production company
Vertigo Entertainment ("The Departed," "The Grudge") and
Colombian TV network and production outfit RCN, the latter of
which is seen as giving their project the inside track on
securing rights.

Vertigo previously teamed up with RCN to clinch remake
rights to the Colombian film "Al Final del Espectro," and has
set up the project at Universal Pictures with the working title
"At the End of the Spectra."

Brand is aiming to both develop and direct the hostage
rescue project, which has no writer on board yet. The producers
also are looking to meet with financiers and studios in the
coming weeks.

Betancourt, a former presidential candidate of Colombian
and French descent, had been held captive along with three
Americans and a group of Colombian police officers -- some
since 2002 -- by rebels from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Colombia, or FARC.

Colombian military forces took acting lessons and spent
months planting themselves among the rebels before culminating
in a mission that saw the rebels tricked into thinking the
captives were being transferred to another camp.

The feature will tell the story from three points of view
-- the American, the French and the Colombian -- and recreate
the rescue. The project also will be set partially in France,
and a French production partner is likely to come on board.

Vertigo is currently behind one of the summer's unlikeliest
hits, horror thriller "The Strangers."